2003 Plymouth State Athletic Hall of Fame

PAUL ANDREW ('96): A two-time All-New England
midfielder in the mid 1990s, Andrew helped re-establish the Panther
men's soccer program as one of the best around under head coach
Shawn Griffin.Andrew served as captain for three seasons, helping
the team to a four-year record of 44-24-3.He epitomized the term
‘student-athlete,' earning Academic All-America honors as a
junior and a senior and graduating with a 3.97 grade point average
in political science.

A native of Paisley, Scotland, Andrew made an immediate impact
on the soccer team as a freshman, earning the Little East
Conference Rookie of the Year Award in 1992.He was selected LEC
Player of the Year and All-New England the next two seasons after
helping the team to consecutive conference championships.Despite
missing the first half of his senior season with an injury, Andrew
was named All-LEC for the third straight year and was selected to
the New England Senior All-Star game.He finished his career with
the school assist record (34), and his single-season mark of 18
assists in 1993 stood as the standard until 1997.

After a 6-8-2 record as a freshman in 1992, Andrew helped the
Panthers to a combined record of 38-16-1 from 1993-95, including
three straight post-season berths (ECAC Tournament in '93 and '94,
NCAA Tourney in '95).He was also active off the soccer field, being
voted to the prestigious Academic All-America team in 1995 and
1996.He served a two-year Fellowship in the Sports Information
Office, and was Sports Editor and Political Columnist of the
student newspaper.Andrew received the Paul Arold Memorial Award in
1996 as PSC's top student-athlete.

DIANE COTE-BURK ('78): One of the top gymnasts
in Plymouth State history, Cote-Burk has continued her involvement
in the sport as a teacher, coach and judge at the elite level.She
is the co-owner of the Granite State Gymnastic Center in Bow, N.H.,
and has been a member of the NHIAA Gymnastic Committee since 1980.

Cote-Burk was a member of the PSC varsity gymnastics team from
1974-78, serving as team captain her senior year.She holds six
school records, including individual marks on the uneven bars
(7.3), balance beam (7.05) and floor exercise (7.45) as well as
team marks in vaulting (28.75), beam (23.25) and floor (26.15).

In addition to running the Granite State Gymnastic Center since
1978, Cote-Burk has been an esteemed judge for a quarter
century.She received a Class 1 rating in 1980, and has judged at
such events as Eastern Regional Championships in Orlando, Fla.
(2002) and Cleveland, Ohio (2000), and the NCAA Regional
Championships in Gainesville, Fla. in 1996.Cote-Burk has been the
USA Gymnastics State Chairperson since 1996, and was the State
Judging Director from 1984-92.She has spent the past five years as
assistant gymnastic coach at Bow High School, and has received
several honors for her contributions to the sport of gymnastics,
including the John R. Clark Official of the Year Award in 2000-01
from the Union Leader/NH Sunday News.

BILL FLYNN ('80): The star running back on
Plymouth State's football teams of the late 1970s, Flynn was the
first Panther player to make regional headlines for success on the
gridiron.Playing in a football program that was less than 10 years
old, Flynn earned recognition from the New England Sports Writers
and the ECAC for his prowess in the Panther backfield.

Although many statistics from the 1970s weren't kept, Flynn
starred at running back at PSC for four years and was captain of
the team as a senior in 1979.He made headlines on several occasions
in '79, receiving the prestigious Gold Helmet Award from the Boston
Globe and earning weekly honors from the ECAC several times. He was
selected the team's Most Valuable Player Award after becoming the
first player in school history to rush for 1,000 yards in a
season.His mark of 1,068 yards and 10 touchdowns in 1979 still
ranks seventh on the school's single-season rushing list.

Flynn played his final two years under head coach Dan Zaneski
after participating his first two seasons under head coach Charlie
Currier, the man for whom Plymouth State's home field is
named.Flynn has remained active in sports, teaching and coaching at
the high school level in Malden, Mass.

KRISTEN HODSDON-MORISSETTE ('94): One of the
top two-sport athletes in school history, Hodsdon-Morissette set
records and earned top honors as a member of both the women's
basketball and softball teams.She was elected captain of both
sports during her tenure, and helped lead each team to what was
then the most successful season in school history.She continues to
be involved in athletics, as she is a volleyball and softball coach
at Exeter (N.H.) High School.

A point guard on the PSC basketball team, Hodsdon was captain of
the 1994-95 squad that finished with a school-record 21 wins and
became the first team in school history to advance to the NCAA
Tournament.She earned All-Little East Conference First Team honors
as a senior and played in the New England Senior All-Star
Game.Hodsdon set the Plymouth State career assists record in 1995
with 258 (which has since been broken).

On the diamond, Hodsdon starred at shortstop and at the plate,
finishing her career with 11 school records.She was named All-New
England in 1994 after leading the team to a school-record 20 wins
and a berth in the ECAC New England Tournament.Among the records
she set were most hits, runs, doubles and total bases, all for a
season and a career.She also set standards in the field with the
most career assists and the highest fielding average.

CARL McALLISTER ('67): One of the top
basketball players to wear the Panther uniform in an earlier era,
McAllister was only the second player in school history to score
more than 1,000 career points when he accomplished the feat in
1967.He finished his career with 1,050 points and still ranks 14th
on the PSC all-time scoring list.

McAllister was a four-year veteran on the varsity basketball
team under coaches John Foley and Dayton Spaulding from 1963-67.He
led the team in scoring and rebounding as a junior in 1965-66 with
19.2 points a game.He was elected captain as a senior, and was
again one of the scoring and rebounding leaders as he reached the
career 1,000-point plateau.Plymouth State had a winning record all
four years when McAllister was playing, going 51-33 overall and
putting together a 15-6 mark in 1964-65, Coach Foley's final
season.

After graduation, McAllister got involved in coaching, serving
as boys basketball coach at Fall Mountain Regional High School from
1967-71 and taking the team to the Class I semifinals three times
in four years.McAllister returned to Plymouth State to earn his
Master's degree, which he received in 1975.The PSC Men's Basketball
Program honored him with Carl McAllister Day at Foley Gymnasium on
Feb. 10, 1990.

MIKE MOFFETT ('78): The name Mike Moffett is
not only in the Plymouth State Men's Basketball record books, but
in the history books of just about every other Panther sport
because of his work as Sports Information Director from 1986-93.He
etched his name in the basketball annals from 1975-78 with more
than 1,000 points scored and the all-time rebounding record, and
practically re-wrote records in every sport when he put out a book
on the history of Panther Athletics in the early 1990s.

A native of Groveton, N.H., Moffett played four years in a
Panther uniform, finishing with a school record 728 rebounds,
including a record 321 as a junior. Moffett score 1,030
points, becoming the fifth highest scoring leader in the program's
history.He played on three winning PSC teams in four years,
including the 1975-76 unit that finished 19-7 and averaged a
school-record 97.5 points.

In addition to writing the history book, Moffett publicized
Panther Athletics as SID for seven years, promoting numerous
national calibre student-athletes and teams in an era before
computers.He helped start the PSC Athletic Hall of Fame, helped
establish Plymouth State as the site of numerous N.H./Vt. All-Star
games, and served as the first publicist of the Freedom Football
Conference.Moffett is still involved in athletics, having set up
the Sports Management program at N.H. Technical Institute in
Concord.He coached the NHTI basketball team for several years,
taking it to the Small University National Tournament in Kansas in
1998.